BIBLIOGRAPHY. 407 



d. Jamrach, of London, and other noted dealers in foreign wild 



animals. 

 2. < Circus Life and Circus Celebrities ; ' 8vo. London, 1875. 



Contains many references to, or descriptions of, the feats of performing 

 animals, especially the horse. 



XLVIII. ROYAL GEOGRAPHICAL SOCIETY, Journal of the ; a thick 8vo. 

 volume issued annually for the last forty-eight years, its publication 

 having been begun in 1830. Copiously illustrated with maps. 



A perfect treasury of authentic accounts of the original exploration of 

 new lands and islands; including a description of the mental status of 

 primitive races of man in all quarters of the globe. 



XLIX. GILBERT, William, the well-known English novelist. 



'Man at His Lowest: Some Facts for Mr. Darwin,' Day of Rest for 

 February 1875. 



Compares performing monkeys with idiotic and deaf-mute children : espe- 

 cially in regard to the possession of a religious sense ' The Understanding 

 of the Existence of a Deity.' 



L, GILLIES, Robert, C. E., F.L.S., F.R.G.S., one of the Ex-Presidents of the 



Otago Institute, New Zealand. 



' On the Habits of the Trap-door Spider ; ' illustrated. Transactions of 

 the New Zealand Institute, vol. viii. (1876). 



LI. GILLMORE, Capt. Parker, better known perhaps, as a traveller and sports- 

 man, under his twm de plume ' Ubique.' 



1. ' Prairie and Forest : a description of the Game of North America ; ' 



8vo. Illustrated. London, 1874. 



2. ' Prairie Farms and Prairie Folk,' 2 vols. Illustrated. Crown 8vo 



London, 1872. 



LII. GOODSIR, the late Professor, of Edinburgh. 



* Anatomical Memoirs,' 2 vols. Edinburgh, 1868. 

 Contains chapters on 



a. The Nature of Animality.' 



b. ' The Essence of Humanity ; ' and 



c. ' Life and Organisation : ' including a long and important note on 



* Psychological Science.' 



TJTT. GREENWOOD, James, the well-known Amateur Casual ' of the London 



press. 



' In Strange Company ; ' the experiences of a Newspaper Correspondent, 

 the newspaper being the London Daily Telegraph : 2nd ed. ; crown 

 8vo. London, 1874. 



Is of interest from very different points of view 



a. In so far as it represents graphically the human savagery, and the 



mental condition of the human savages, that exist in the midst of 

 civilisation in England ; both in the cities, such as London, and in 

 the country, such as North Devonshire. 



b. The chapter on ' The Art and Mystery of Song- Bird Torture,' shows 



the use made by man of the passions or propensities of the lower 

 animals of love, jealousy, rivalry and pugnacity ; with their 

 successful deception by man's imitations of their notes or calls, and 

 by stuffed inanimate individuals of their own species. 



LIV. HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert, editor of the Portfolio,' a well-known 



English artist and art-critic. 

 Chapters on Animals.' Illustrated ; 8vo. London, 1873. 



